Summary:When the fabric is weaved, the warp and weft weave changes are used to form a pattern, the yarn count is fine, and the r...
When the fabric is weaved, the warp and weft weave changes are used to form a pattern, the yarn count is fine, and the requirements for raw cotton are extremely high. It can be divided into woven, warp knitted and weft knitted jacquard. Weft knitted fabrics have good elasticity when pulled horizontally and vertically, while warp knitted and woven jacquards have no elasticity when pulled horizontally and vertically.
Jacquard fabric classification
Single-color jacquard is a jacquard dyed fabric—the jacquard grey fabric is woven first by a jacquard loom, and then dyed and finished, and the finished fabric is solid color; multi-color jacquard is a yarn-dyed jacquard fabric—the yarn is dyed first and then woven by the jacquard loom The yarn-dyed jacquard fabric has more than two colors, the fabric is rich in color, not monotonous, the pattern is three-dimensional, and the grade is higher. There is no limit to the width of the fabric, and the pure cotton fabric has a slight shrinkage, no pilling, and no color fading. Jacquard fabrics can generally be used as materials for high-end and high-end clothing production or for decorative industry materials (such as curtains, sofa fabrics). The manufacturing process of jacquard fabrics is complex. The warp and weft yarns are intertwined with each other to form different patterns.
Soft, delicate and smooth unique texture, good gloss, good drape and breathability, high color fastness (yarn dyeing). The patterns of jacquard fabrics are large and exquisite, and the color layers are distinct and three-dimensional, while the patterns of small jacquard fabrics are relatively simple and single.
Satin jacquard fabric (cloth): Warp and weft yarns are interlaced at least every three yarns, so the satin weave makes the fabric denser, so the fabric is thicker. Satin weave products are more expensive than similar plain weave and twill weave products. Fabrics woven with satin weave are collectively referred to as satin fabrics. Satin fabrics are divided into positive and negative sides. A complete weave loop has the fewest interlacing points and the longest float. The surface of the fabric is almost entirely composed of warp or weft floats. The satin fabric is soft in texture. The satin fabric has positive and negative sides, the cloth surface is smooth and delicate, and it is full of luster. The most common satin fabric is striped satin, or satin for short. Divided into 40 pieces of 2m 4 width satin strips and 60 pieces of 2m 8 width satin strips. First weaving and then dyeing process, this kind of fabric is generally solid color, extending horizontally. The pure cotton fabric has a slight shrinkage, no pilling, and is not easy to fade.